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5 Star Air Boss Review from One Bag One World

Red Oxx Air Boss Lives Up To Its Hype.

When Brad from the One Bag One World Blog took the time to write a cool in-depth article reviewing our popular Air Boss Carry-on Travel Bag, we were stoked. Brad really took the Air Boss out on the town traveling thousands of miles on a 10 day trip. Brad’s honesty is refreshing and he lays it on the line. Many thanks to OBOW for letting us reprint their blog.

TOP PICK

Ten days and several thousand miles have convinced me that the Red Oxx Air Boss lives up to its hype as one of the most functional and well-made carry-on bags available. The Air Boss is probably not for everyone since it has no wheels. Then again, it was not designed for everyone, but for the serious one-bag leisure or business traveler who needs a highly functional shoulder bag which adapts to a variety of travel needs."

NO WHEELS, NO BACKPACK STRAPS

"There are two ways to carry the Air Boss: with your hand or with your shoulder. This is actually the key to its mobility. A shoulder bag is much better for uneven terrain (like cobblestones, gravel parking lots, or dirt paths), and is preferable for stairs, escalators, or subway platforms. Darting through the airport throngs is also a breeze with nothing in tow. No wheels also means less weight and more interior room. Convertible bags with backpack straps (Red Oxx is developing one of these – stay tuned) are popular, but a backpack-style bag is a little out of place with my sportcoat, and I find a good shoulder strap to be at least as comfortable as one (or two) backpack straps."

"Red Oxx has one of the finest shoulder straps I’ve tried. It’s called The Claw for good reason: it will not slip from your shoulder. As an old news photographer, I know that a strap that is too wide or too cushy will not stay on the shoulder. A good strap like The Claw strikes a balance between bite and comfort, and above all, it stays put. The heavy chromed metal strap hardware is overbuilt like the rest of the bag. I’m pretty sure The Claw could double as towing strap for an automobile!"

VERSATILE & SIMPLE

"The Air Boss’s three-compartment design sets it apart from most carry-ons. The two outer compartments are 2.5 inches wide and the center compartment is 4 inches wide. Zippers for each compartment wrap around three sides of the bag, allowing any of the compartments to be opened fully when the bag is lying flat. This makes it easy to carefully place folded clothes in the compartments without stuffing – which means fewer wrinkles. The two outer compartments have two hold-down straps each. The outer compartments are where most of your clothing would go. I like to put normal clothing on one side and coats, outerwear, or sweaters on the other, so that some days I only have to open one side. With a one-compartment design you basically have to do a complete unpack and repack every day. Not so with the well-designed Air Boss."

"The center compartment has no hold-downs. Both walls of the center compartment have light closed-cell foam padding which also serves to stiffen the bag slightly so that it holds its shape when it’s not full. This center compartment is ideal for hair dryers, thick books, larger electronics, shoes, shaving or cosmetic bag, or a laptop computer. Since only the walls are padded and bottom of the bag is not, it’s probably best to put a laptop in a sleeve or slim-line computer case. I used the center compartment for my unpadded briefcase which I use as a day bag while traveling. The ability to stow a laptop, briefcase, or daypack in this center compartment means the Air Boss is perfect for travel through the United Kingdom where new security regulations allow only one carry-on and everything must fit in that one bag."

"Most of my suggestions for improvements to the Air Boss involve the inner compartments. Padding the bottom of the center compartment would make it better for carrying a laptop. The hold-downs in the outer compartments are adequate, but having three instead of two would make them work even better. The center compartment might also benefit from hold-down straps on one wall for securing clothing, large printed material, or a laptop."

"One of my favorite things about the Boss (which I’ll discuss below) is its simplicity, but I believe I’d prefer that at least one of the outer compartments have a zippered mesh pocket for storing dirty or damp clothes."

LESS IS MORE

"I have a convertible carry-on bag that has so many zippers and pockets that I can never find anything. This is not a problem with the simple Air Boss design. It has the three main compartments mentioned above plus a snapped outer pocket and a narrow vertical zippered pocket (perfect for boarding passes) on one side and a full-width exterior zippered pocket on the other. That’s it: no confusion; no gimmicks. The snapped pocket is ideal for stowing your belt and TSA liquid baggie until you clear security, and of course it’s ideal for newspapers, magazines, or a full-size atlas. The zippered pockets are for stowing things that need to be more secure"

ZIPPERS, SEAMS, FABRIC & MONKEY FISTS

"Speaking of zippers, Red Oxx uses the best money can buy: YKK #10’s which are reliable and silky smooth. Cheap zippers always fail, sooner or later. These are not cheap zippers. I’m no sewing expert, but even I can tell that this bag is very well put together. The Red Oxx guys got their start as military parachute riggers, and the craftsmanship and attention to detail is obvious in their work. The bag fabric is 1000 weight urethane-coated, Dupont-certified Cordura nylon — the highest grade. Snaps and metal hardware are stainless steel. And I have to mention a small but not insignificant detail – the monkey’s fist knots. These are hand-tied in nylon cord to serve as unique, functional zipper pulls, and besides that, they’re just plain cool."

Good genes

"The Air Boss is the result of collaboration and consultation with onebag.com travel/packing guru Doug Dyment. His insight paired with the Montana-based Red Oxx company’s manufacturing skill and commitment to quality makes this bag unique… The Red Oxx website also has a packing diagram (developed by Dyment) just for this bag. This bundle packing plan works. I can attest that my clothing had fewer wrinkles when properly packed in the Air Boss than I’ve gotten with other bags and methods."

CAPACIOUS

"The Air Boss is slightly under maximum carry-on dimensions at 21”x 13”x 9” but it’s hard to imagine a carry-on with more capacity. The fact that the Air Boss has no wheels, pull handles, rigid internal frame, or lots of silly compartments means you can stuff a lot in the Air Boss. I use an ultra-light packing list. My load was only about 12-15 pounds worth which means the bag was not nearly full, and, in fact, the Air Boss is a little too large for me.

The good news is that it’s perfect for most people who are going to pack twice as many clothes as I do plus a pair of shoes and hair dryer. I’m guessing most travelers will probably pack their Air Boss to 18-25 pounds. Many international carriers now limit carry-ons to 22 pounds. The Air Boss would be ideal for those trying to stay in that weight range. I’m a quite sure though that it’s built well-enough to handle any load you can stuff in it.

The soft-side design also means that the Air Boss should fit almost any aircraft overhead luggage compartment. It even fits the tiny Embraer 145 regional jet’s overhead compartments which cause most carry-ons to be gate-checked and thrown into the baggage hold. In larger jets the Air Boss will fit in the overhead compartments either way – parallel or perpendicular to the aircraft aisle. The Air Boss weighs only about three pounds. Some carry-on bags weigh 12 pounds or more empty – as much as my Air Boss weighed fully packed."

LOOKS & STYLE

"The Air Boss comes in 12 color combinations. The colors are strong and deep – distinctive without being overly bright (except for the yellow, which is pretty bright). This is a nice-looking bag which works for corporate or casual types."

WHO IT’S FOR

"If you can’t carry a bag far and require wheels the Air Boss is not for you. If you’re looking for a bag that will handle almost any travel situation and terrain with aplomb, check out the Air Boss. For reasons stated above it is ideal for the present security situation that carry-on travelers face. And its lifetime warranty means it should serve you for years to come – through whatever the future holds for savvy travelers."

COST

"At $255 its price is in line with other top-of-the line shoulder bags and is well below that of many wheeled carry-ons."

Suggested improvements

"Aside from minor changes to the interior compartments which are mentioned above, I believe compression straps to cinch up the bag when it is under-packed would be helpful. These would make the bag more useful to me since I’m not likely to ever fill the Air Boss up. All soft-sided bags are liable to some bulging when over-packed and compression straps would help minimize this too."

Wow! We don’t think we could have written a more complimentary and brutally honest review if we tried. This is the whole truth and nothing but the truth. We’ll certainly take the criticisms to heart and do some "product development." Thanks again, One Bag One World has our travel philosophy to a T.